73.—Spear as it would have come from the Mould. details |
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| Image title: | 73.—Spear as it would have come from the Mould. | |
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| Source: | Knight, Charles: “Old England: A Pictorial Museum” (1845) | |
| Place shown: | none | |
| Keywords: | weapons, celts, greyscale | |
| Status: | public domain in the USA, out of copyright in Canada, hence royalty-free stock image for all purposes and no usage credit required | |
Notes: |
“The weapons of the ancient Britons show their acquaintance with the casting of metals. Their axe-heads, called Celts, are composed of ten parts of copper and one of tin (Figs. 70 and 71); their spear-heads, of six parts of copper and one of tin. Moulds for spear-heads have been frequently found in Britain and Ireland (Figs. 72 and 73).” (p. 23) |
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| Filename: | 0073-Spear-q85-257x743.jpg | |
| Blog link: | http://www.fromoldbooks.org/OldEngland/pages/0073-Spear//0073-Spear-q75-173x500.jpg | |
| Comment: | Add a link, leave a comment or change keywords | |